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02- holiday picture dictionary

October 5, 2010

an experimental travel picture dictionary in six languages. It's a cross between Richard Scarry and Robert Capa and free to download as a PDF file. I found it handy, when I visited Dingle and Prague. Languages are: English, French, German, Spanish, Czech, Irish. The pics are a mixture between my own photographs, scrapbook illustrations and there are a few drawings by Stephen Cartwright. PS: It's not the final version.

[www.scribd.com]

Exercise: if you go on a day trip  (either in your own country or abroad), take a print-out of this
PDF-document with you and write down the words depicted in the images. It is a variation of the
popular, I-spy game. 

Most of all:  enjoy your holiday!





Holiday Dictionary

writing a travel journal by e-How
http://www.ultimatenewzealand.com/images/diary_auckland.jpg

Buy a high quality sturdy travel journal. A pamphlet that is held together by staples will fall apart in days. Be sure your travel journal is bound like a book. Hard bound travel journals are the best. It doesn't need to be printed as a travel journal. It just has to be a book with a lot of empty pages.

Get in the habit of writing in your travel journal every day. When you are on a busy journey it is easy to forget to write. You will regret this later when priceless memories are forgotten. You may promise yourself that you will go back and write about your experiences later, but that almost never happens. Take a few minutes every day and jot down your memories. It doesn't have to be long, just on a regular basis.


Use your "down time" for your travel journal. There is a surprising amount of sitting around while traveling. You can always jot down a few lines in your travel journal when you are on trains, waiting for planes, drying your laundry, or waiting in line.

Date your entries in your travel journal. In your heading write down the day, where you are, who you are with, maybe even the weather and what you ate that day. These are the first details people tend to forget. Years later when you read your journal you will know exactly what you were doing on that day. The memories will come rushing back.

Focus on writing about how you feel. Listing facts and figures is fine but that isn't why you traveled. A long journey is a time for contemplation and self reflection. Being in a foreign environment heightens emotions and reactions. Memories of these feelings fade quickly with time. Writing about those experiences while the memories are fresh is essential.


Make lists. Travel often inspires more travel. Make a list of places you want to go next. Try a list of the most unusual experiences on your trip. Describe the ten most interesting people you encountered. You decide what to list. List making not only prioritizes your experiences, it also forces you to think about them in relation to each other.


Keep ticket stubs. Whenever you use a ticket for a train or museum or ride, tape the stub to your journal. Also keep candy wrappers, brochures and receipts. They are pieces of history from your journey. They also contain valuable information that you may not appreciate at the time. Years later you can look at the ticket stub and see exactly what you were doing on a specific day and how much it cost.


Read more: How to Write a Travel Journal | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_4473094_write-travel-journal.html#ixzz11VIzfgDD


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Tips on writing a travel article by e-how

Write a travelogue keeping in mind that your travelogue doesn't have to stress the attractiveness of the place you're writing about. And not all travelogue pieces need to assume or state that the reader wants or needs to follow in the writer's footsteps. Write about a journey in story format: present a situation, complicate a situation and then provide climax along with resolution.
Weave dialogue and suspense into your travel descriptions when you write a travelogue. Lessons about life or at least some kind of eventful or historic theme may serve as the framework of your travelogue. Day-by-day recordings of nothing but where you went, what you saw and what you ate may make for a drab, dull touring log.

Be specific as much as possible when you write a travelogue. Give your readers an idea of what the transportation costs may be. Suggest the best mode of travel for this particular journey, whether it be by car, bus, plane or train or a combination of ways. Find out as much information as possible about local hotels, motels or other accommodations. Check around to see what forms of entertainment are recommended. If major theme parks are there, tell your readers what kind of ticket prices to expect.
Tell your readers what type of weather situation to expect in whatever season they may travel there in when you write a travelogue. Some destinations may have major season events you must tell your readers about, such as a local Christmas extravaganza.